24 April 2012

the hardest type of lesson

I'll get right to the punch, because that's how it feels, like I've been punched. I haven't been able to catch my breath for weeks, my chest is tight and heavy.

Our dog, Bella, got very sick, very fast. And then she was gone. Is gone. She is gone.

One of the many hard things is that it took me so long to find a groove with her. You see, she was my husband's dog. And his best friend. Bella didn't like me very much, not for a very long time. She was bossy, and demanding, and manipulative, and was able to play my husband against me and I resented it.

And since she was always with him, she was never with me. Not just the two of us anyway.
And then I got a puppy, and my attentions were elsewhere.

But after time, my husband took some trips and didn't take her. He and I worked different schedules and sometimes I was alone with her. And, well, life got hard for a while and it turns out she is a really good listener. Was. But the magical moment was when I started walking her on lunches. Just me and her (because I physically can't walk both dogs at once - too strong!).

The first time we went out she was a pulling, barkey mess. And then I gave her a treat to try to get her to sit and calm the fuck down. It was the briefest thing, but we realized that each other were okay. From then on, our walks were really lovely. She started cuddeling me, and she is the best cuddler. Was. Was the best. Somehow we just found our groove.

So now we are left with a Bella sized hole in our lives.
It is a noticable hole: she was an under-foot type of dog. Always in the way, always present. So the lack of her is so palabale, a constant reminder that she isn't being stepped on in the kitchen while you are trying to cook. She isn't worming her way out the door because she can't bear for you to leave without her.

And we can hardly bear it, her absence.

But I've learned, learned so much, so much that I should have learned before I lost her.
Learned to be more patient and appreciative of the constant need for attention, the under foot and in the way. I realize now that much like people those things that drive you up the wall are often also the things that make them 'them' and that those are the things you miss most when they are gone.

I should have learned it sooner. But I'm glad I learned it at all.